MPS Week 1 Powerpoints 2020
MPS Week 1 Powerpoints 2020
MPS Week 1 Powerpoints 2020
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Discussion
• What is the
Differences Between Public and Private
Sector Management
• Government must serve all people and all segments of
society.
Public administration must engage with diverse groups and
individuals.
Planning and decision making becomes slower and more difficult.
• Ambiguity, an advantage in politics, can also make objectives
unclear.
• Power, often diffused in a political system, tends to be clearer
in the corporate sector.
• There are many competing and conflicting values in
government, while performance measures tend to be more
clear-cut in business.
Differences Between Public and Private
Sector Management
• Public administration operates within…
a rule-based and procedurally-bound personnel
system.
a relatively short time horizon driven by the
political cycle.
• Breaking
NPM: Competition
• Compulsory Competitive Tendering
• Purchaser-Provider
• Service Level Agreements
• Best Value
NPM: Management Practices
• Human Resources Management
• Management Activities
• Management Techniques
NPM: Resource Management
• Discipline
• Economy
• Efficiency
• ‘More for Less’
NPM: ‘Hands-On’ Management
• Strategic Management
• Operational Management
• Performance Management
• Partnership Management
NPM: Standards of Performance
• Explicit and
NPM: Output Controls
• Performance
Pollitt Concepts & Practices
2003
• Greater emphasis on ‘performance’, especially through the
measurement of outputs
• A preference for lean, flat, small, specialized (disaggregated)
organisational forms over large, multi-functional forms
• A widespread substitution of contracts for hierarchical
relations as the principal coordinating device
• A widespread injection of market-type mechanisms (MTMs)
including competitive tendering, public sector league tables
and performance-related pay
• An emphasis on treating service users as ‘customers’ and on
the application of generic quality improvement techniques
such as TQM
Summary
• To what
Dilemmas
• Behave more entrepreneurially, take risks, be creative,
exercise new managerial freedoms;
• But at the same time, be more responsive to the current
government’s policies
• And, by the way, make sure you are more transparent, more
measured, more audited, more quality-checked than ever
before;
• And don’t take any significant decisions which will affect
particular groups of citizens without getting their participation
or at the very least, thoroughly consulting them beforehand.
(Pollitt 2003)
Future Expectations
• Do things differently?
• Do different things?
• Engage more with communities
• Work more in partnership/joint resourcing
• Be more ‘business-like’?
• Be more efficient?
• Do more for less?
• Make savings?
• Sustainability
Public Management Pre-1979
• Plowden
Public Management 1979-97
• Efficiency Strategy
• Lord Rayner – Personal Advisor to Thatcher
– Efficiency Unit
• Financial Management Initiative 1982
– a large-scale review of departmental systems of managerial
responsibility, financial accounting and control
• Next Steps 1986
– Phase 1: Taking Forward Scrutiny Process 1987-88
– Phase 2: Getting Agencification up and running 1998-92
– Phase 3: Moving into ‘business as usual mode 1992-95
• Citizen’s Charter 1991
– Charter Mark
Public Management 1997-
• Continuity and
Public Management
• Civil Service
• Local Government
– Arms length organisations
• Governmental Agencies
Public Administration in Scotland
Structure Role
The Executive: The The Scottish Executive (or cabinet) is made up of the first
Scottish Government minister, the two law officers (the lord advocate and the
solicitor general) and other Scottish ministers.
The party or coalition of parties with the majority of seats
in the parliament forms the executive
Responsible for Devolved Matters
Judicial: The Scottish Make decisions in both civil and criminal cases. They
Courts ensure cases and verdicts are within the limits of the law
and hand down judgments and sentences.
Will advice Scottish Government on legal implication on
Policy and Legislation
Public Management in Scotland
• National Performance Framework
– 7 Purpose Targets
– 5 Strategic Objectives
– 16 National Outcomes
– 55 Indicators
• Best Value 2
• The Christie Commission
• Community Planning
• Single Outcome Agreements
• Integration of Health and Social Care
• Digital Scotland
The Manager in a Political
Environment
• Public Management Sensitivity
• Business-Like But Not Like a Business
• Doing Well While Doing Good
• Evidence Based Policy and Decision Making
• Outcome Driven
Module Assessment
Individual Essay 1,500 words Week 7 (40%)
• On one of the following:
– To what extent is Hood’s 1991 concept of New
Public Management alive and well in
contemporary public management in Scotland.
– To what extent have the roles and activities of
managers changed in the management of public
services.
• Individual Essay 2500 words Week 13 (60%)
Critiques of NPM